Gordon Baym

Gordon Alan Baym (born July 1, 1935) is an American theoretical physicist.

Gordon Baym
Born(1935-07-01)July 1, 1935
New York City, New York, USA
NationalityAmerican
Alma materCornell University
Harvard University
Known forBaym-Kadanoff functional
AwardsHans A. Bethe Prize (2002)
Lars Onsager Prize (2008)
Eugene Feenberg Memorial Medal, (2011)
Scientific career
FieldsPhysics
InstitutionsUniversity of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Doctoral advisorJulian Schwinger

Born in New York City, he graduated from the Brooklyn Technical High School, and received his undergraduate degree from Cornell University in 1956. He earned his Ph.D. from Harvard University in 1960, studying under Julian Schwinger.

He joined the physics faculty of the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign in 1963, becoming a full professor in 1968. His areas of research range from condensed-matter physics to nuclear physics and astrophysics, as well as the history of physics.

In 1962 he and Leo Kadanoff collaborated on Quantum Statistical Mechanics: Green's Function Methods in Equilibrium and Nonequilibrium Problems. In 1969 he published Lectures on Quantum Mechanics, a widely used graduate textbook that, unconventionally, begins with photon polarization. In 1991 he and Chris Pethick published the monograph Landau Fermi-Liquid Theory: Concepts and Applications.

Baym was awarded the Hans A. Bethe Prize in 2002 "For his superb synthesis of fundamental concepts which have provided an understanding of matter at extreme conditions, ranging from crusts and interiors of neutron stars to matter at ultrahigh temperature".[1] He also received the Lars Onsager Prize in 2008 "for fundamental applications of statistical physics to quantum fluids, including Fermi liquid theory and ground-state properties of dilute quantum gases, and for bringing a conceptual unity to these areas"[2] along with Christopher Pethick and Tin-Lun Ho.

He has four children, professors of communications Nancy Baym and Geoffrey Baym, mathematician and biologist Michael Baym, and cognitive neuroscientist Carol Baym. He was married to Nina Baym, a professor of English at the UIUC, and Lillian Hoddeson, a professor of History at UIUC.

Awards and honors

gollark: Why not use Rust instead?
gollark: I briefly read that as NFTs.
gollark: I assume a sensibly designed one will manage that, sure.
gollark: Implement supercapacitors in software and continue writing?
gollark: <@!330678593904443393> If it's halfway through writing data but then the machine implodes, what is it *meant* to do?

References

  1. Prize Recipient
  2. Prize Recipient
  3. "Book of Members, 1780-2010: Chapter B" (PDF). American Academy of Arts and Sciences. Retrieved May 28, 2011.
  4. "Online directory". National Acacdemy of Sciences. Retrieved December 13, 2011.
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